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FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Italian Andrea Enria was picked on Wednesday to head the European Central Bank's supervisory arm, overseeing a bloated, 21 trillion euro banking sector still troubled by a legacy of bad debt from the euro zone's financial crisis.

Defeating Ireland's Sharon Donnery in a hotly-contested run-off, Enria will now head the Single Supervisory Mechanism, covering the euro zone's 118 top lenders, with many still reeling from the last recession and facing new challenges from hacking to fintech.

Enria, who has chaired the London-based European Banking Authority since 2011, has played a major role in shaping the European Union's new financial rulebook in the aftermath of the crisis.

A former supervisor at the Bank of Italy and the ECB, he is viewed as politically neutral and ruffled some feathers at home for what was seen as an overly tough stance on unpaid bank loans and credit to small companies.

Heading one of the EU's newest institutions, he will be charged with reforming an industry whose fragmented structure and regulatory framework, low profits and piles of non-performing loans have left it struggling to compete globally.

Sources told Reuters earlier that Enria's candidacy would be backed by the central banks of Italy and other southern European countries, while northern Europeans were expected to split their vote as both candidates were seen as qualified for the job.

Southern Europeans were alienated by Donnery's harsh approach as the main architect of the ECB's drive to clean up banks' balance sheets from bad loans, which are mainly concentrated in Cyprus, Greece, Portugal and Italy.

The initiative, though still approved, was eventually watered down due to opposition from Italy.

Enria, while not enjoying Italian political support, was still seen as the candidate with a more constructive approach to Italian banks, some of the weakest lenders in Europe.

While Donnery's appointment would not have legally disqualified Lane, having two senior officials from a relatively small country would have been difficult to sell politically as several nations have never held a top ECB job.

(editing by John Stonestreet; editing by David Stamp)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)